Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Kindled. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Kindled Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Prentice Prefontaine,Nicholson Baker,David Pogue,Drew Gilpin Faust,Khaled Hosseini for you to enjoy and share.
The life of a Kindle book is a few years, give or take.
There's a time and place for the Kindle, and I own one now and have books on it that I don't otherwise have. But I don't find that my hand reaches out for it the way it does for a trade paperback, or (in the middle of the night) for the iPod Touch.
The Kindle is the most successful electronic book-reading tablet so far, but that's not saying much; Silicon Valley is littered with the corpses of e-book reader projects.
I often read nonfiction with a pencil in hand. I love the feel, the smell, the design, the weight of a book, but I also enjoy the convenience of my Kindle - for travel and for procuring a book in seconds.
I give novels as gifts, and there is nothing I like to receive more as a gift.
I try to read a Kindle Single a week, but I'm getting bad at that. I usually have a few books on the go.
...It's [kindle] a useful addition to our library, not a replacement for it.
Panic's Of Tremble1, is on Kindle form.
But, you know, I just did a big trip in the spring to Vietnam and Cambodia and Thailand, and that's when I bought a Kindle. I have like 15 books on this one little gizmo. But when I came home, the first night I picked up the book that was on my nightstand and I went right back to that.
I got my iPad, and I'm trying to buy books on that, but I kind of like a book. At the end of my life, when I'm old, I want to have all these shelves full of books. So I'm just gonna do the book thing.
I am a bed of sparks you breathe upon and kindle
bookgn e-reading.club
Try letting a Kindle protect your heart from sniper fire!
Librarians save lives: by handing the right book, at the right time, to a kid in need
I'm active on Twitter, and I love my iPad and my Kindle.
I think I was the third person in the world to get a Kindle, and I hated it from the minute I got it.
As hope kindles hope, millions more will find it. By our efforts, we have lit a fire as well - a fire in the minds of men. It warms those who feel its power, it burns those who fight its progress, and one day this untamed fire of freedom will reach the darkest corners of our world.
Consider the millions who are buying those modern Aladdin's lamps called e-readers. These magical devices, ever more beautiful and nimble in design, have only to be lightly rubbed for the genie of literature to be summoned.
Books like a box of chocolates; each one sweet and unique!
My books are inert as cordwood till a reader's imagination ignites one and an old flame jumps to life.
If Kindle is upgraded with face recognition and biometric sensors, it can know what made you laugh, what made you sad and what made you angry. Soon, books will read you while you are reading them.
I have always loved books, and as a mother, I wanted to share my passion for reading with my children.
A book is a wonderful present. Though it may grow worn, it will never grow old.
Books are no more threatened by Kindle than stairs by elevators.
I love my Kindle, but there are many books that I need to physically own. I think having the choice makes all the difference. Instant gratification - buying a book digitally and owning it sixty seconds later - really is a revolutionary act.
For readers, one of life's more electrifying discoveries is that they ARE readers--not just capable of doing it...but in love with it...The first book that does that is never forgotten, and each page seems to bring a fresh revelation, one that burns and exalts...
So I pulled out my Kindle and got swept away in a book.
A book is a friend.
Though I enjoy the occasional eBook from time to time, I will only stop reading books printed on paper when they pry them from my cold, dead, withered hands, and even then, they will be hard pressed to take them from me.
I sometimes read books on my iPad.
She still loves the feel of a new book. While she appreciates the convenience of those thin, slick e-readers, they don't give her the three-dimensional sensory experience that comes with a real book.
Books are cold but safe friends
The gadget had come with The New Oxford American Dictionary preloaded. You only had to begin typing your word and the Kindle found it for you. It was, he thought, TiVo for bookworms.
I have read on a Kindle. But the Kindle we had only worked for about eight months then it stopped working. You don't have to get books repaired.
The Kindle itself is just the tip of the iceberg, and its true workings are invisible.
My Kindle and my battery operated boyfriend are my best friends!
Books are like bound dreams waiting to be released
If you are an avid reader that loves to discover new books and authors, Kindle Unlimited is going to provide you an amazing deal.
A book, the greatest gift ever
I get a warm feeling among my books.
Nothing ever invented provides such sustenance, such infinite reward for time spent, as a good book.
Books are my Disease.
As parents, we have to find the time and the energy to step in and help our children love reading. We can read to them, talk to them about what they're reading, and make time for this by turning off the television set ourselves. Libraries are a critical tool to help parents do this.
All that gleaming leather and gold stamping and beautiful type belongs in the pine-panelled library of an English country home; it wants to be read by the fire in a gentleman's leather easy chair--not on a secondhand studio couch in a one-room hovel in a broken-down brownstone front.
They'll get my Kindle when they pry it from my cold dead hands, if my corpse will release it.
Reading for me will be a combination of books, magazines, Tumblr and just kind of the Web in general on the iPad.
Second hand books are wild books, homeless books; they have come together in vast flocks of variegated feather, and have a charm which the domesticated volumes of the library lack.
I read one chapter of a book and put it down. Thank God for Kindle.
Books are packaged dreams.
Books to the people!
The younger generation is surrounded by the Internet, apps, and video games. But somehow, my books make them read.
A book is a gift you can read again and again.
I hunger for books.
Amazon is winning the ebook revolution, but it may lose the war.
Books make great gifts because you don't have to plug them in.
Books are many things: lullabies for the weary, ointment for the wounded, armour for the fearful and nests for those in need of a home.
Reading is such a personal thing to me. I'd much rather give someone a gift certificate to a bookstore, and let that person choose his or her own books.
Don't give me books for Christmas; I already have a book.
Successive generations of middle-class parents used to foist their own favourite books on their children. But some time in the late Eighties it began to wane - not because children had lost interest in adorable animals but because most of it was available on useful, pacifying video.
After I read 'The Hunger Games,' I went out and got 'Catching Fire' the next day.
A lot of books are sold and given away as presents. But who actually reads and enjoy reading?
I rely on my iPad for on-the-go entertainment. I stock it with TV shows, like 'Parks and Recreation' and the British version of 'The Office.' I'm reading a Charles Manson biography on it too, since I'm weirdly into true crime.
Choosing from every book ever published seems like a dream, until you're forced to sift through hundreds of thousands of titles on your Kindle, and all the reviews attached to them, hoping to find something good.
e-books "smell like burned fuel
Book. Candle. Nico.
Of gifts, there seems none more becoming to offer a friend than a beautiful book.
Book is a nice companion
Comic books and The Chronicles of Narnia. My mother used to read those to me and my twin brother growing up.
The world of books: romantic, idle, shiftless world so beautiful, so cheap compared with living.
A mind possessed by unmade books.
I still enjoy the tactile sensation of holding a book. But when I need to read fast for work, I use the Kindle App on my iPad.
You may have heard the news that the independent bookstore is dead, that books are dead, that maybe even reading is dead - to which I say, Pull up a chair, friend. I have a story to tell.
Like cross stich scrapbook cook take my dogs for walks.injoying making new nook friends
always enjoying reading books
If I give a book as a gift, it is invariably a children's book with beautiful artwork and a simple text. I adore the feel of them, the care taken in the artwork, and the high visual stimulation that sets off the simple but often powerful message the text conveys.
Now, 75 years [after To Kill a Mockingbird], in an abundant society where people have laptops, cell phones, iPods, and minds like empty rooms, I still plod along with books.
[Open Letter, O Magazine, July 2006]
Libraries raised me.
Originally self-published, in different form, as an ebook in 2011 .
Goodreads is where introverts unite.
I am an avid reader.
Honestly, I think we should be delighted people still want to read, be it on a Kindle or a Nook or whatever the latest device is.
I'm just trying to get kids motivated to be readers by connecting them with a book they like.
I own an e-reader, but I use it almost exclusively to read things that aren't books - student theses, unbound galleys.
A book is a present that you can open again and again
One reason I love the Kindle, more so than the iPad, is that on the Kindle you can't do anything else but read. It's the best, because it does the least. It doesn't even show a clock.
What a feat of transmission: the emotive powers of the book, with no local habitation, pass safely from writer to reader, unmangled by printing and binding and shipping, renewed and available whenever we open it.
Books, the children of the brain.
The greatest gift is a passion for reading.
Books burn too easily, and they don't keep you warm.
If you're not a parent, if you're an aunt or uncle or neighbor, books are an amazing gift.
Have they all bought Kindles? I have one, and I use it most nights. I always imagine the books staring and whispering, Traitor! - but come on, I have a lot of free first chapters to get through.
In these economic times, reading is still the only affordable & fun luxury left....
Books wind into the heart.
A book with the genuine power to stir and comfort its readers.
Of all things, I liked books best.
The fire of literacy is created by the emotional sparks between a child, a book, and the person reading. It isn't achieved by the book alone, nor by the child alone, nor by the adult who's reading aloud - it's the relationship winding between all three, bringing them together in easy harmony.
I am hopelessly devoted to paper. Nothing against e-readers of any sort - anything that keeps people reading is okay by me - but I am not, historically, an early adopter of such things.
E-books are great for instant gratification - you see a review somewhere of a book that interests you, and you can start reading it five minutes later.
Here's my library, where I don't do a lot of reading but mostly play Angry Birds on the computer.
I mainly buy books in my free time.